We’ve rounded up five links to our best-read news.
Higher Ed Dive is taking a look back at some of our best-read news of 2022, from billion-dollar settlements to developments in the test-optional movement. Read on below for links to five top news stories from the year.
This list isn’t all of our stories that received the most page view traffic. If it was, coverage of the U.S. Department of Education’s $6 billion Sweet v. Cardona borrower defense to repayment settlement would have dominated. That’s a key story, and we’re featuring it in the top slot, but we want to touch on other important news that developed, as well.
Today we sent our subscribers a newsletter with a longer list of 20 top-read news stories. If you’d like to receive emails like that in the future — as well as our regular daily email packed with news, features and opinion pieces — please consider signing up here. The regular daily email is on winter break right now, but it will resume Jan. 4.
The deal would cancel $6 billion in student loans for students who say the Education Department didn't respond to allegations 151 colleges misled them. Read the full article ➔
The latest number from FairTest trails a final count of more than 1,800 institutions in 2022's admissions cycle but tracks ahead of a tally from last July. Read the full article ➔
Most of the institutions will likely be featured in the next iteration of the database, which typically publishes in September. Read the full article ➔
The online program manager expects the restructuring will lead to about $70 million in annual cost savings. Read the full article ➔
The Ivy League institution said it would not participate in the forthcoming rankings amid allegations it provided the publication inaccurate information. Read the full article ➔
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Amid worries that faculty backgrounds limit what gets taught and researched, some critics say upper-class faculty are a feature of the system, not a bug.
Georgia's university system bans TikTok, WeChat on college-owned devices. Former fencing coach, father acquitted in Harvard admissions bribery case.
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Amid worries that faculty backgrounds limit what gets taught and researched, some critics say upper-class faculty are a feature of the system, not a bug.
Georgia's university system bans TikTok, WeChat on college-owned devices. Former fencing coach, father acquitted in Harvard admissions bribery case.
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